The Scotsman

Life jacket could have saved Sea Mist captain

- By ANGUS HOWARTH

A fisherman who drowned after becoming entangled in his own gear could have survived if he was wearing a life jacket, an investigat­ion has found.

Tony Masson, skipper of the Sea Mist, was dragged under water on March 27 while working with creels, used to capture shellfish, off the Aberdeensh­ire coast.

His empty vessel was found by his son, a fellow fisherman, who raised the alarm and later found his father’s baseball cap floating in the water.

The Marine Accident Investigat­ion Branch (MAIB) said the presence of a “physical barrier” between the fisherman and his rope “would probably have prevented this accident”.

In safety advice issued following the investigat­ion, the MAIB said: “The skipper was working alone on deck without a life jacket or personal locator beacon.

“Once he entered the water, he had no means of raising the alarm or remaining afloat without the need to swim.

“Without the buoyant support of a life jacket a person’s survival time after sudden immersion in cold water can be measured in minutes. In this case, like many others, a life jacket might well have saved the skipper’s life.”

The investigat­ion found: “Once he was in the water it is most likely that Sea Mist’s skipper was pulled under the water by the weight of the creels and was unable to free himself before he drowned.”

There have been 33 recorded fatalities on UK creel boats since 2007.

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